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Thursday, November 28, 2019
So Deeply To Be Reverenced, So Fair, Essays - Divine Comedy
  So deeply to be reverenced, so fair,        My lady is when her smile bestows,         All sound of speaking falters to a close         And eyes which would behold her do not dare                                                                   Of praises sung of her she is aware,        Yet clad in sweet humility she goes        A miracle in which the world may share.          Dante Alighieri  Sonet XXVI Lavita Nueva       At age nine, Dante was graced by the beauty of Beatrice Portinari, and for the rest of     his life, many of his writings portrayed his intense love for merely the thought of her     which seemed to haunt him. Although his relationship with her was only from afar,     within his mind, Beatrice captivated him as he believed she was a miracle sent from     heaven.       Women have been portrayed in every way throughout time. More often, women have     portrayed as a model of Eve, the misguided seductress of Adam in the Bible. The lure of     a woman is ambiguous, a mystery of the sensual persona that has captivated many     medieval writers. Dante does not portray women as the weakness of all man, instead in     his Comedia, Beatrice is the divine beauty and guide of his journey into heaven.     Undoubtedly, Beatrice captivated Dante enough for him to dedicate his Comedia to, and     through his vivid imagination, he recreates her as a heavenly spirit who protects his     ultimate fate as she is the most influencial character.       Dante wrote La Comedia in the age of religious devotion and fear of sin, which     signifies La Comedia as an ultimate portrayal of medieval thought. A sure anxiety of the     afterlife was cultivated by the rise of Christianity. What is the ultimate sin? How does     one repent sin? What is the journey of the afterlife? Endless questions surely haunted the     medieval mind, and Dante was surely fascinated by the possibilities. Within his     curiosities was beatrice, who enchanted Dante and possibly encouraged his           medieval mind, and Dante was surely fascinated by the possibilities. Within his     curiosities was Beatrice, who enchanted Dante and possibly encouraged his     writing of La Comedia after her death.         My Soul- Such years had passed since last it saw        that lady and stood trembling in her presence,        stupefied by the power of holy awe-        now, by some power that shone from her above        the reach and witness of my mortal eyes,        felt the full mastery of enduring love.     Dante Alighieri  La Comedia  Canto XXX Purgatorio       This is Dante's first sight of Beatrice in La Comedia. He has not seen her in ten years     since her death, but at this first sight, he immediately feels his deep love for her. He     dresses her in the colors of hope, faith and caritas, three divine qualities that he saw in her     earthly presence and also here, on his way to Paradiso. Beatrice as a woman was Dante's     inspiration, and even after her death, he portrays her as his most divine persona of     perfection.       In the medieval Christian mind, all divine beings (such as Beatrice) could read into the     true soul of a mortal man. It is difficult to analyze Dante's motivation to write La     Comedia, but his portrayal of Beatrice may have been a personal prayer to her. If Dante     revealed his enchantment of her soul, his belief that she was a miracle sent from God, and     his absolute love that consumed his every thought, possibly she would allow him into her     heart when he died and made his own journey into heaven.                       Oh lady in whom my hope shall ever soar      and who my salvation suffered even      to set your feet upon Hell's broken floor         Through your power and your excellence alone      have I recognized the goodness and the grace      inherent in the things I have been shown.  Dante Aligheri  La Comedia  Canto XXXI Paradiso       Throughout his life, Dante's most profound writings have been inspired by his     utmost love for Beatrice. Dante graciously thanks Beatrice for his understanding of the     divine virtues in his Comedia. Throughout his life, Dante had been inspired by the mere     presence of her beauty and grace on earth, and as he portrayed her angelic persona in La     Comedia. La Vita Nueva was a poetry book devoted solely to her, as La Comedia was his     ultimate vision and appreciation of her    
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